About Permaculture

Permaculture is the art and science of designing human beings' place in the environment. Permaculture design teaches you to understand and mirror the patterns found in healthy natural environments. You can then build profitable, productive, sustainable, cultivated ecosystems, which include people, and have the diversity, stability, and resilience of natural ecosystems.

Most design systems are defined by a "market driven" ethic. Such designs are subservient to the conclusions of a short term cost/benefit analysis, discounting or ignoring such factors as environmental degradation or destruction of human community. Permaculture departs from any other design system in that it is guided by a common sense ethical system. This system forms the criteria for design decisions. The difference is in the ethic:

Contour Fencing - Uses cattle tracks to stop runoff and erosion. Fences laid out with a slight (1:500) drop towards watering troughs on the ridgeline. Cowpaths naturally parallel the fence and lead rainwater out of the valleys to ridges for infiltration. Straight fences and watering cattle in valley bottoms rapidly accelerates erosion and pollutes streams.

Care of the Earth,

Care of the People of the Earth, and

System surpluses distributed in accordance with the first two ethics.

Briefly, when a design component isn't ecologically sound, community-building, and careful in its use of resources, then it's pretty unlikely that it will work out in the long run. This ethic is the basis of sustainability and also makes excellent, long-term business sense. Systems designed with these ethics are ecologically sound, economically stable, community building, and don't leave future generations with a cleanup bill for today's enterprise.